Social Media and Nutritional Guidelines in Pregnancy

IF 2.1 4区 医学 Q2 NURSING Journal of midwifery & women's health Pub Date : 2024-05-20 DOI:10.1111/jmwh.13645
Nora Drummond CNM, DNP, FNP-BC, Alexa Miller FNP-BC, DNP, Melia Kramer CNM, MSN, Ruth Zielinski CNM, PhD
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Abstract

Introduction

Nutrition impacts health outcomes of pregnant people and their fetuses. Discussing nutrition with patients may be challenging for health care providers. In this vacuum, patients use social media for health information during pregnancy. Little is known about the type and quality of nutrition information that is available on social media. The aim of this study was to qualitatively explore the pregnancy nutrition messages contained in social media videos for content and evaluate the information's concordance with evidence-based guidelines.

Methods

A review of current social media video content for nutrition in pregnancy was conducted across 4 platforms: YouTube, Instagram, Facebook, and TikTok. Content analysis was used to descriptively and categorically analyze the social media video content.

Results

In the 62 social media videos reviewed, most were not consistent with established guidelines, were inaccurate, or presented a homogenous and unrealistic image of the pregnant person. Four categories of nutrition in pregnancy social media information emerged: what to eat, what not to eat, what I ate: aspirational, and what I ate: rebellion. Few videos were produced by health care organizations. Some were produced by anonymous organizations, with the majority made by pregnant or postpartum people. Many were testimonial or confessional in style. Despite regulations requiring identification of paid posts and advertisements, it was difficult to discern if videos were authentic sharing of patient experiences or advertisements.

Discussion

There is incorrect and incomplete information on social media surrounding nutrition in pregnancy. Professional guidelines for nutrition in pregnancy are available but are not as accessible to patients as social media videos. Social media use is associated with disordered eating and increased risk of anxiety and depression. However, targeted interventions by health care providers that use social media platforms have been successful in the distribution of credible health information. Midwives and other health care providers should share evidence-based nutrition recommendation with patients to facilitate meaningful conversations around nutrition in pregnancy during in person and online interactions.

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社交媒体与孕期营养指南。
引言营养影响孕妇及其胎儿的健康状况。对于医疗服务提供者来说,与患者讨论营养问题可能具有挑战性。在这种真空状态下,患者会使用社交媒体来获取孕期健康信息。人们对社交媒体上营养信息的类型和质量知之甚少。本研究旨在对社交媒体视频中包含的孕期营养信息内容进行定性探索,并评估这些信息与循证指南的一致性:方法:我们在 4 个平台上对当前社交媒体上的孕期营养视频内容进行了审查:方法:我们对当前社交媒体上有关孕期营养的视频内容进行了回顾,涉及 4 个平台:YouTube、Instagram、Facebook 和 TikTok。采用内容分析法对社交媒体视频内容进行描述性分析和分类分析:结果:在所审查的 62 个社交媒体视频中,大多数都不符合既定的指导原则、不准确或展示了单一且不切实际的孕妇形象。孕期营养社交媒体信息分为四类:该吃什么、不该吃什么、我吃了什么:理想、我吃了什么:叛逆。很少有视频是由医疗机构制作的。有些视频是由匿名组织制作的,大多数视频是由孕妇或产后妇女制作的。许多视频都是见证式或忏悔式的。尽管有规定要求识别付费帖子和广告,但很难辨别视频是真实的患者经验分享还是广告:讨论:社交媒体上关于孕期营养的信息不正确、不完整。虽然有孕期营养的专业指南,但患者并不像社交媒体视频那样容易获取。社交媒体的使用与饮食紊乱、焦虑和抑郁风险增加有关。不过,医疗服务提供者利用社交媒体平台进行有针对性的干预,在传播可信的健康信息方面取得了成功。助产士和其他医疗服务提供者应与患者分享循证营养建议,以促进在面对面和在线互动中围绕孕期营养进行有意义的对话。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.60
自引率
7.40%
发文量
103
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: The Journal of Midwifery & Women''s Health (JMWH) is a bimonthly, peer-reviewed journal dedicated to the publication of original research and review articles that focus on midwifery and women''s health. JMWH provides a forum for interdisciplinary exchange across a broad range of women''s health issues. Manuscripts that address midwifery, women''s health, education, evidence-based practice, public health, policy, and research are welcomed
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